The exhibition proudly announces Franz Paludetto as its academic consultant. Bringing Italian audiences the latest creations of contemporary Chinese artists, this exhibition attends to the intimate relation between the artists’ works and the “utopia” of art, and examines key issues such as modernized application of traditional Chinese aesthetic elements, criticism and intervention of art on reality, construction of the “utopia” of art, among others.

One of the core premises of contemporary artists is the means through which they could stand on and then transcend reality to establish their own “utopia” of art. Shi Zheng visualized emotions in changing light and shadow; He Xun discovered poetic moments in ordinary details of reality; Hai Bo used black-and-white images to show the lovely and melancholic life; Jin Jinghong and Xue Feng both in pure forms explored the multiplicity of art world; Qiu Xiaofei found the implicit association of color between dreams and reality. These artworks lead us to a “utopia” of aestheticism through a flowing aesthetic experience. Following the artists, we strike a crack in reality: beauty suddenly stops its steps, and patronizes this human world.

Some artists held ambiguous attitude toward the thought of art surpassing reality, and refrained from the optimism about the possibility of creating a “utopia” of aestheticism. Nonetheless, this caution enables us to go beyond the illusion of “utopia” and return to complex reality. Liang Manyong expressed a loneliness of fitting in nowhere through seemingly happy little monsters; Meng Yangyang confronted individuals’ unsettled emotions in brighter or dimmer halos; Ding Shiwei conveyed political metaphors with gloomy and hopeless strokes; Deng Dafei innovatively used rubbings to discuss ruins of modern cities; Yang Rui attempted to escape from the curse of reality via religion; Shi Yiran found lovely moments in life but froze them as moments of sadness; Ma Qiusha created an art world that looks beautiful but is in fact fragile; similarly, Cheng Ran pressed on toward the inner regrets of every person, urging us to face the unreachable other side. These forces of loneliness and despair seem to echo with the reality in China. They do not have to be associated with politics, but they do reflect some anxieties deeply hidden there. Such anxieties burst the perfect illusion about reality, preserving some valuable space for going beyond “utopia”.

“Utopia” cannot be an eternal land of bliss. It could also well be the disturbing reality behind a perfect illusion, in which the present, the past, and the future peacefully coexist and reach transient equilibrium. China’s young contemporary artists are also looking for their own voice of art in certain equilibrium. They look poles apart, but all root in some types of Chinese plots and reality, with subtle interconnections. Here also quietly lies the hidden power of China’s contemporary art to embrace the “utopia of art” and transcend the utopian illusion.